BEIJING,
May 16 (Xinhuanet) -- The universe is dustier than previously thought,
which is why astronomers now suggest it is twice as bright as it
appears.
Astronomers have known about
interstellar dust for a while, but they haven't been able to quantify
just how much light it blocks. Now a team of researchers has studied a
catalogue of galaxies and found that dust shields roughly 50 percent of
their light.
"I was shocked by
the sheer scale of the effect," said Simon Driver, an astronomer from
the University of St. Andrews in Scotland who led the study. "Most
people just kind of said, 'We suspect dust is a minor problem.' I spent
much of my career working on deep images from Hubble and I've always
ignored dust almost entirely."
The result will
likely cause many astronomers to revise their calculations of the
intrinsic brightness of many celestial objects, Driver said. Until now,
many astronomers thought stars and galaxies were really about 10 percent
brighter in optical light than they appeared because of dust. If the
new findings are true, it turns out that objects in the sky are about
twice as bright than they appear.
"This is a strong,
clear-cut result," Driver told SPACE.com. "We've really got to take
dust seriously and we've got to make large adjustments to our magnitude
calculations." (A magnitude scale is used to define brightness of
celestial objects.)
Interstellar dust
is made up of lumps of carbon and silicates that form dust grains only a
few thousandths of a millimeter long. It hangs out in galaxies, but
generally steers clear of the space between them.
To calculate
dust's effect, the researchers analyzed data from the Millennium Galaxy
Catalogue, a collection of images of 10,000 galaxies compiled by Driver
and his team using the Isaac Newton Telescope on La Palma and others.
They counted the
number of galaxies in the catalogue that were directly facing us, and
compared it to the number that were tilted 90 degrees away from us.
Without dust, they reasoned, they should see just about equal numbers of
galaxies in each orientation. But with dust, they would likely find
fewer edge-on than face-on galaxies. Since dust lies in the disks of
spiral galaxies, and not the dense central bulge, when we view galaxies
from the side we are looking through thicker layers of dust, so we
should see less light. In fact, the researchers counted about 70 percent
fewer edge-on galaxies than face-on galaxies.
They used this
discrepancy to quantify dust's effect by combing their counts with a
model of dust distribution in galaxies developed by Cristina Popescu of
the University of Central Lancashire and Richard Tuffs of the Max Plank
Institute for Nuclear Physics.
(Agencies)